Description
Vincent Bach Mouthpieces: FAQs
Bach mouthpieces are widely regarded as a brass instrument manufacturing benchmark due to their precise engineering, consistency, and enduring designs. With production beginning around 1918, they quickly established a defining feature: a sizing system that has since become a global reference for players and manufacturers. This consistency allows players to move between models with predictable changes in feel and response.
Since they first appeared, Bach mouthpieces have remained widely used across every performance setting. Now a part of Conn-Selmer (following its acquisition of the Vincent Bach brand in 1961), they continue to follow their original design principles and industry-standard sizing framework, ensuring consistency across generations of players.
Vincent Bach’s sizing system is one of the most widely adopted frameworks in brass instrument design. Each model (for example 3, 7, 10) follows a consistent structure defined by cup depth, rim diameter, and throat characteristics in a predictable way across the range. This means players can change models with known, incremental differences, while teachers can recommend sizes with broad consistency across brands.
Yes. Bach mouthpieces have been widely used in music education, particularly since brass teaching became more structured in the mid-20th century. Because of the standardised sizing system, beginners can start on an all-purpose model such as the 7, and progress within the same framework as their technique develops.
Originally developed during the 1920s and 1930s to suit a wide range of performance environments, Bach mouthpieces prioritise versatility. Today, they are widely used across orchestral, jazz, brass band, and commercial settings due to their balanced tonal characteristics and predictable response.
This depends on your embouchure, experience level, and tonal preference. The sizing system makes it easier to compare models systematically. Key factors include cup depth (tone and range), rim shape (comfort and endurance), and throat size (airflow and resistance). Although some trial and error is required, differences between models are predictable and structured.
Many professionals rely on Bach because its sizing provides a fixed reference point for both teachers and performers, ensuring a predictable response from designs that have remained stable since their early 20th-century origins. Even when experimenting with other brands, many players refer back to Bach models for their familiarity, balance, and reliability.
| Model | Depth | Diameter (mm) |
Rim shape | Manufacturer's description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3 | Medium | 17.60 | Narrow | A large mouthpiece for great volume of tone, especially in the low register. |
| 7 | Medium | 17.25 | Narrow | Fairly large size, for a strong embouchure. |
| 7S | Medium | 17.25 | Narrow | Same as No. 7 but with larger throat and backbore. Freer blowing, darker sound. |
| 10 | Deep | 16.80 | Medium wide | This cushion-rim model produces the German romantic horn tone, rich in volume, beautiful in quality. A player having no difficulty with the high register should use this model. |
| 10S | Deep | 16.80 | Medium wide | Same as No. 10 but with larger throat and backbore. |
| 11 | Medium | 16.55 | Medium wide | Our best selling model, with cushion rim and brilliant heroic tone. Players who do strenuous work prefer this model. |
| 12 | Medium | 16.50 | Narrow | This rim gives greater flexibility to players with a rather delicate embouchure. |
| 15 | Medium | 16.30 | Narrow | Medium small. For players with a rather tender embouchure but who nevertheless want a good volume of tone. |
| 16 | Deep | 16.25 | Medium wide | For players with sensitive embouchures who strive for a pure, solid, romantic horn tone. |
| 18 | Medium | 16.15 | Narrow | A small mouthpiece. Requires little strength to fill. Well suited for weak lips. |
Manufacturer’s website: conn-selmer.eu